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‘Oh Boy! So Many Questions!’ about China in Africa

BEIJING â€" As Chinese President Xi Jinping continues his first overseas trip as his country’s leader, arriving in South Africa late on Monday after Russia and Tanzania, he meets with much goodwill - but also some concern among Africans that China may be a “new colonial power,” extracting resources and selling manufactured goods, as I reported on Sunday.

China knows it. In a speech in Tanzania, Mr. Xi sought to calm the concerns, as my colleagues Chris Buckley and Jeffrey Gettleman reported.

“China frankly faces up to the new circumstances and new problems in Sino-African relations,” Mr. Xi told an audience of Tanzanian politicians and officials in Dar es Salaam, the country’s economic hub and a center of government, speaking in a conference center built with Chinese loans and support. “China has and will continue to work alongside African countries to take practical measures to appropriately solve problems in trade and economic cooperation so that African countries gain more from that cooperation,” he said, in an apparent nod to those concerns.

But Tanzania’s president, Jakaya Kikwete, appeared less worried about it than Mr. Xi. In an interview with Chinese reporters, he said China was no different from any other major power in Africa, and questioned the intense interest in the topic, China Radio International reported.

“Why when we have relations with the others there is no problem” Mr. Kikwete asked, apparently rhetorically. “But when we have relations with China, oh boy! So many questions!” he continued in the interview, which took place just before Mr. Xi’s arrival on Sunday.

Tanzania looks “for investments, technology, markets and development assistance,” said Mr. Kikwete, adding: “This is all we are getting from China. Our relationship with China is about that. With the U.S. is about that, with Europe is about that, with Japan is about that, with India is about that. So if the issue is neo-colonialism then it is with everybody,” he said.

“Trade has increased tremendously between China and Tanzania,” he said. “And also, I agree with you, that China sells more to Tanzania than what Tanzania sells to China. This is something that we need to change. But how do you change that We have an acute supply-side constraint. There is so much we can do but we cannot do it now because our major constraint is investment.”

China’s trade with all African countries, including North African nations like Libya and Egypt, reached nearly $200 billion in 2012, an increase of more than 19 percent from 2011, according to Chinese government figures. Oil, ore and other commodities from Angola, Nigeria and other resource-rich countries make up much of that. Trade unions and manufacturers in South Africa, Nigeria and other countries have said China’s relatively cheap manufactured goods are a threat to their jobs and long-term growth, as Chris and Jeffrey reported.

“China takes our primary goods and sells us manufactured ones,” Lamido Sanusi, the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, wrote in The Financial Times this month. “This was also the essence of colonialism.”

On his trip, Mr. Xi has sought to counter the view of China as a new colonial power in Africa. Before his departure from Beijing last Friday, Xinhua reported that Mr. Xi’s “China Dream” of prosperity was one that could be shared by the whole world. Including Africa.

In South Africa this week, Mr. Xi will attend a summit meeting of the “BRICS” emerging countries: Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. His final stop will be the Republic of Congo, before he returns to Beijing on Saturday.



‘Oh Boy! So Many Questions!’ about China in Africa

BEIJING â€" As Chinese President Xi Jinping continues his first overseas trip as his country’s leader, arriving in South Africa late on Monday after Russia and Tanzania, he meets with much goodwill - but also some concern among Africans that China may be a “new colonial power,” extracting resources and selling manufactured goods, as I reported on Sunday.

China knows it. In a speech in Tanzania, Mr. Xi sought to calm the concerns, as my colleagues Chris Buckley and Jeffrey Gettleman reported.

“China frankly faces up to the new circumstances and new problems in Sino-African relations,” Mr. Xi told an audience of Tanzanian politicians and officials in Dar es Salaam, the country’s economic hub and a center of government, speaking in a conference center built with Chinese loans and support. “China has and will continue to work alongside African countries to take practical measures to appropriately solve problems in trade and economic cooperation so that African countries gain more from that cooperation,” he said, in an apparent nod to those concerns.

But Tanzania’s president, Jakaya Kikwete, appeared less worried about it than Mr. Xi. In an interview with Chinese reporters, he said China was no different from any other major power in Africa, and questioned the intense interest in the topic, China Radio International reported.

“Why when we have relations with the others there is no problem” Mr. Kikwete asked, apparently rhetorically. “But when we have relations with China, oh boy! So many questions!” he continued in the interview, which took place just before Mr. Xi’s arrival on Sunday.

Tanzania looks “for investments, technology, markets and development assistance,” said Mr. Kikwete, adding: “This is all we are getting from China. Our relationship with China is about that. With the U.S. is about that, with Europe is about that, with Japan is about that, with India is about that. So if the issue is neo-colonialism then it is with everybody,” he said.

“Trade has increased tremendously between China and Tanzania,” he said. “And also, I agree with you, that China sells more to Tanzania than what Tanzania sells to China. This is something that we need to change. But how do you change that We have an acute supply-side constraint. There is so much we can do but we cannot do it now because our major constraint is investment.”

China’s trade with all African countries, including North African nations like Libya and Egypt, reached nearly $200 billion in 2012, an increase of more than 19 percent from 2011, according to Chinese government figures. Oil, ore and other commodities from Angola, Nigeria and other resource-rich countries make up much of that. Trade unions and manufacturers in South Africa, Nigeria and other countries have said China’s relatively cheap manufactured goods are a threat to their jobs and long-term growth, as Chris and Jeffrey reported.

“China takes our primary goods and sells us manufactured ones,” Lamido Sanusi, the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, wrote in The Financial Times this month. “This was also the essence of colonialism.”

On his trip, Mr. Xi has sought to counter the view of China as a new colonial power in Africa. Before his departure from Beijing last Friday, Xinhua reported that Mr. Xi’s “China Dream” of prosperity was one that could be shared by the whole world. Including Africa.

In South Africa this week, Mr. Xi will attend a summit meeting of the “BRICS” emerging countries: Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. His final stop will be the Republic of Congo, before he returns to Beijing on Saturday.



IHT Quick Read: March 26

NEWS Account holders, business customers and many experts worry that Europe’s solution to the banking crisis in Cyprus is only a temporary bandage. Liz Alderman and Landon Thomas Jr. report from Nicosia.

Within hours of the American military’s formally transferring all but a “small number” of the Afghan prisoners at the Bagram Prison to the Afghan government, President Hamid Karzai held a friendly news conference with Secretary of State John Kerry on Monday that stood in stark contrast to his recent acrimonious tone toward the United States. Rod Nordland reports from Bagram, Afghanistan, and Michael R. Gordon and Alissa J. Rubin from Kabul.

Hong Kong’s highest court ruled unanimously on Monday that a woman from the Philippines who had lived and worked here for nearly 27 years as a domestic helper was not entitled to permanent residency, ending an acrimonious legal fight over the immigration rights of migrant workers. Keith Bradsher reports from Hong Kong.

A post-mortem examination on the exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky found the cause of death was “consistent with hanging” with no sign of a violent struggle, the police said late Monday, after two days of intense speculation over the final hours of one of the Kremlin’s most vocal critics. Stephen Castle reports from London.

Two news organizations have reported that the man known as Prisoner X, Benjamin Zygier, unintentionally revealed the identities of two top spies for Israel in Lebanon to a man known to be close to Hezbollah. Isabel Kershner reports from Jerusalem.

President Xi Jinping defended China’s economic stake in many African countries during a speech on Monday in Tanzania, and promised aid in a bid to counter fears over competitive Chinese companies. Chris Buckley reports from Hong Kong.

The French trade minister said any U.S.-Europe trade agreement would have to overcome thorny issues, including France’s insistence on special treatment to protect its homegrown music and movies. David Jolly reports from Paris.

Prime Minister David Cameron promised more stringent rules Monday to reduce outsiders’ access to social, health and housing benefits, reflecting a fraught debate in Britain over the potential impact of increased immigration from southeast Europe that could fuel a rightist threat to his Conservative Party. Stephen Castle reports from London, and Alan Cowell from Venice.

FASHION An exhibition at Harrods in London celebrates the legacy of Dior, the enduring French brand. Suzy Menkes reviews from London.

ARTS The National Gallery’s new exhibition of works by Albrecht Dürer covers his career from beginning to end. Holland Cotter reviews from Washington.

SPORTS As a fifth consecutive World Cup appearance comes into view, it is no longer about how soon Japan secures its place but how long it stays there. John Duerden reports.



In Death as in Life, Berezovsky Remains a Puzzle

In death as in life, Boris A. Berezovsky, the former tycoon who amassed billions of dollars and enormous political influence in post-Soviet Russia, remained true to Winston Churchill’s depiction of his land as the supreme enigma.

Mr. Berezovsky, 67, died alone in a locked bathroom at a mansion outside London and, according to the officer leading the investigation, Detective Chief Inspector Kevin Brown, there was “no evidence of any third-party involvement at this stage.”

But the puzzles remained â€" particularly about whether, after almost 13 years in self-exile, tilting against Russia’s leaders, Mr. Berezovsky had finally succumbed to homesickness for his native Russia, where the authorities said he had written to President Vladimir V. Putin â€" for many years his arch-foe â€" to say he wished to come home.

Some of Mr. Berezovsky’s closest onetime advisers disputed that. Alex Goldfarb, who worked closely with Mr. Berezovsky and often spoke for him, said that, if he did indeed write such a letter, that could only have been a reflection of his troubled state since losing a $5 billion lawsuit months ago to Roman A. Abramovich, the billionaire owner of the Chelsea soccer club (among many other businesses, luxury yachts and upscale homes). If he wrote the letter at all, Mr. Goldfarb said in an interview, “it was the letter of a broken man.”

The lawsuit was seen by many as a turning-point to decline for Mr. Berezovsky. But his penury in its wake as he struggled to pay debts and legal costs may have had broader consequences.

For many years, Mr. Berezovsky supported Marina Litvinenko, the widow of former K.G.B. agent Alexander Litvinenko, who was poisoned with radioactive polonium in November 2006. After losing the Abramovich lawsuit, he told her that he could no longer afford to maintain that support. As I try to explain in my latest column for the International Herald Tribune, that may turn out to be part of a bitter legacy for a man who once said he trusted British justice implicitly.



Can Earth Hour Help Save the Planet

THE HAGUE â€" Camera, lights off, action!

Last Saturday night between 8:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. local time â€" at this time of year, an hour of darkness in most places â€" hundreds of millions people switched off non-essential electric lights for Earth Hour.

Initiated by the WWF, the annual event is aimed at raising awareness of the planet and climate change.

Ban Ki-moon, the secretary general of the United Nations, said in a video in support of Earth Hour:

We participate with an undimmed determination to take action on climate change. Everyone has a role to play. Governments need to provide the political will, businesses can contribute solutions, and civil society, especially young people, can mobilize global action.

Far from the somber affair the gravity of the challenge would suggest, the yearly event becomes a rolling celebration as clocks in successive time zones strike 8:30 p.m..

This year’s event included large and colorful candlelight demonstrations, concerts and shows attracting crowds in cities around the world.

Among the gaggle of environmental events on the calendar each year that try to bring public focus to a particular environmental issue, Earth Hour is a superstar.

The commander of the International Space Station, Chris Hadfield, took to twitter to promise to watch the events unfold.

Even Vladimir Putin participated in Earth Hour, for the first time this year, switching off the lights in the Kremlin.

The success of the six-year-old event can be measured not only in how many people participated or which celebrities endorsed it, but also what public monuments take part in the event.

Besides the Kremlin in Moscow’s red square, the Harbor Bridge in Sidney, the Eiffel Tower in Paris (the city of light), Buckingham Palace in London, the Empire State Building in New York and the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco were among the many well-known structures and buildings that go dark for an hour at 8:30 p.m. local time.

Our calendar is chock full of dates that call for collective action or attention to environmental issues. Several days during the year are dedicated to bigger and more general issues, while other days - such as World Wetland Day (February 2th) or World Sparrow Day (March 20th), for example - focus on a much more specific cause.

Here on Rendezvous, we reported last year on Park(ing) Day and the 24-hour Climate Reality webcast and, just last week, on World Water Day.

But what do these publicized events actually do to help the environment

The Christian Science Monitor investigated whether Earth Hour itself actually reduces carbon emissions (one of the most commonly known causes of climate change). It found that the burning candles used during the event to replace the electric lights, generally do not pollute as much as the lights would.

A Canadian utility found that the energy saved in Ontario alone during last year’s Earth Hour would be enough to completely power a city of 50,000 people for that hour.

But the event itself is not supposed to save the planet; it’s supposed to call attention to the fight.

In Australia, the birthplace of the event, one famous building was well lit during Earth Hour. The Sidney Opera House shone green this year, when many other buildings were dark, to show its commitment to renewable energy.

Join our conversation. Do you think such symbolic actions as Earth Hour can concretely help save the planet



IHT Quick Read: March 25

NEWS Struggling into the early-morning hours to avoid a collapse of Cyprus’s banking system, European Union leaders on Monday agreed on a bailout package intended to keep Cyprus in the euro zone and rebuild its devastated economy. James Kanter reports from Brussels, and Liz Alderman and Andrew Higgins from Nicosia, Cyprus.

With help from the C.I.A., Arab governments and Turkey have sharply increased their military aid to Syria’s opposition fighters in recent months, expanding a secret airlift of arms and equipment for the uprising against PresidentBashar al-Assad, according to air traffic data, interviews with officials in several countries and the accounts of rebel commanders. C.J. Chivers and Eric Schmitt report.

The ferocity of deadly rioting between Buddhists and Muslims in central Myanmar last week has further underlined how ethnic and religious fissures in the country pose serious impediments to democratic change in the country. Thomas Fuller reports from Bangkok.

The moment of ruin for Boris A. Berezovsky, the exiled Russian oligarch who was found dead on Saturday, came in a humiliating court ruling last August after he lost a $5.1 billion lawsuit against a former associate. Sarah Lyall reports from London.

Peng Liyuan, China’s new first lady, is glamorous, fashionable and one of her nation’s best-known singers, a startling contrast to her dour-looking predecessors. As she accompanies her husband, President Xi Jinping, on his first trip abroad as China’s leader, Ms. Peng appears ready to carve out a new role for herself. Jane Perlez and Bree Feng report from Beijing.

As the amount of data carried on mobile networks explodes â€" Cisco Systems estimates the level will rise about 66 percent this year â€" countries across Europe are busy selling off their broadcast spectrum to keep the digital discourse flowing. Kevin J. O’Brien reports from Berlin.

Universal Music Group and Samsung have established The Kleek, a pan-African digital music service, joining providers offering music to a mostly mobile audience. Eric Pfanner reports from Serraval, France.

EDUCATION The growing number of people studying abroad is a lucrative market, and Canada is trying to capture a bigger share of it. Elaine Smith reports from Toronto.

ARTS The Bauhaus Archive in Berlin is trying to make amends to the early artists who felt marginalized at the school, by celebrating their work in the “Female Bauhaus” series of exhibitions. Alice Rawsthorn reviews from Berlin.

SPORTS Sebastian Vettel, the reigning world champion for the Red Bull team, won the Malaysian Grand Prix after he ignored team orders and stole the victory from his teammate Mark Webber with 10 laps left. Brad Spurgeon reports from Kuala Lumpur.

The French soccer team, which has changed coaches twice, changed its hierarchy and changed much of its team, is on top of the group that Spain needs to win to qualify for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Rob Hughes reports.



IHT Quick Read: March 25

NEWS Struggling into the early-morning hours to avoid a collapse of Cyprus’s banking system, European Union leaders on Monday agreed on a bailout package intended to keep Cyprus in the euro zone and rebuild its devastated economy. James Kanter reports from Brussels, and Liz Alderman and Andrew Higgins from Nicosia, Cyprus.

With help from the C.I.A., Arab governments and Turkey have sharply increased their military aid to Syria’s opposition fighters in recent months, expanding a secret airlift of arms and equipment for the uprising against PresidentBashar al-Assad, according to air traffic data, interviews with officials in several countries and the accounts of rebel commanders. C.J. Chivers and Eric Schmitt report.

The ferocity of deadly rioting between Buddhists and Muslims in central Myanmar last week has further underlined how ethnic and religious fissures in the country pose serious impediments to democratic change in the country. Thomas Fuller reports from Bangkok.

The moment of ruin for Boris A. Berezovsky, the exiled Russian oligarch who was found dead on Saturday, came in a humiliating court ruling last August after he lost a $5.1 billion lawsuit against a former associate. Sarah Lyall reports from London.

Peng Liyuan, China’s new first lady, is glamorous, fashionable and one of her nation’s best-known singers, a startling contrast to her dour-looking predecessors. As she accompanies her husband, President Xi Jinping, on his first trip abroad as China’s leader, Ms. Peng appears ready to carve out a new role for herself. Jane Perlez and Bree Feng report from Beijing.

As the amount of data carried on mobile networks explodes â€" Cisco Systems estimates the level will rise about 66 percent this year â€" countries across Europe are busy selling off their broadcast spectrum to keep the digital discourse flowing. Kevin J. O’Brien reports from Berlin.

Universal Music Group and Samsung have established The Kleek, a pan-African digital music service, joining providers offering music to a mostly mobile audience. Eric Pfanner reports from Serraval, France.

EDUCATION The growing number of people studying abroad is a lucrative market, and Canada is trying to capture a bigger share of it. Elaine Smith reports from Toronto.

ARTS The Bauhaus Archive in Berlin is trying to make amends to the early artists who felt marginalized at the school, by celebrating their work in the “Female Bauhaus” series of exhibitions. Alice Rawsthorn reviews from Berlin.

SPORTS Sebastian Vettel, the reigning world champion for the Red Bull team, won the Malaysian Grand Prix after he ignored team orders and stole the victory from his teammate Mark Webber with 10 laps left. Brad Spurgeon reports from Kuala Lumpur.

The French soccer team, which has changed coaches twice, changed its hierarchy and changed much of its team, is on top of the group that Spain needs to win to qualify for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Rob Hughes reports.